Jim Moriarty : Every fairy tale needs a good old-fashioned villain. Jim Moriarty : You need me or you're nothing. Because we're just alike, you and I. Except you're boring. You're on the side of the angels. Moriarty : How hard do you find it, having to say "I don't know? Sherlock Holmes : I don't know. Moriarty : Ooh, that's clever. Sherlock Holmes : You're insane. Jim Moriarty : You're just getting that now? Jim Moriarty : You think you can make me stop the order?
You think you can make me do that? Sherlock Holmes : Yes. Sherlock Holmes : So do you. Are you ready for the story? This is the story of Sir Boast-a-lot. Moriarty : Sir Boast-a-lot was the bravest and cleverest knight at the Round Table. Oh no…. The end. Sherlock : Stop the cab! Stop the cab! What was that? Moriarty : No charge. Kitty Reilly : You are safe. Moriarty is Richard Brook? There is no Moriarty. There never has been.
Look him up. Watson : What are you talking about? Kitty Reilly : Rich Brook. An actor Sherlock Holmes hired to be Moriarty. Moriarty : Well. Here we are at last. You and me, Sherlock. And our problem. And you know what? In the end it easy. It was easy. Just like all of them. Oh well. Moriarty : Did you almost start to wonder if I was real?
Did I nearly get ya? Sherlock : Richard Brook. Moriarty : Nobody seems to get the joke. But you do. Sherlock : Of course. Sherlock : Rich Brook in German is Reichenbach. The case that made my name. You got that too. Sherlock : Beats like digits. Every beat is a one, every rest is a zero. Binary code. It was hidden on me, hidden inside my head. A few simple lines of computer code that can break into any system. Moriarty : Told all my clients. Advancing on him, Sherlock and John chase Moriarty as he escapes through a nearby window.
Later, at St. Bartholomew's Hospital , Sherlock texts Moriarty, who meets him on the roof. Sherlock claims that, with the code, he can completely delete all evidence of Richard Brook from the world. Moriarty says that there is no code, and the tapping rhythm that he did at Sherlock's flat was actually the beats to Bach's Partita No.
Moriarty said to Sherlock that his weakness was that he always wants everything to be intelligent and complex, so then he can solve it and brag about his intellect to others. Moriarty explains that for the past 24 hours, he has convinced the general public that Sherlock Holmes is a fraud and a liar, therefore making Sherlock's once-great reputation completely shattered, and the only person who still trusted him was John.
When asked by Sherlock how he managed to break into the prison, the bank, and the Tower, Moriarty replied that he simply bribed security guards to collaborate with him in his scheme. Moriarty's final plan was to drive Sherlock to the point where he would commit suicide to escape his shattered life, but as Sherlock had no wish to do so, Moriarty explained that he'd hired three assassins, strategically located around London, each one ready to shoot Sherlock's only three true friends; Lestrade, Mrs.
Hudson and John. One was disguised as a police officer outside DI Lestrade's office, another was disguised as a repairman inside the Baker Street flat, and the final one was located in a tower building opposite St.
Bart's hospital. Moriarty is then revealed to know a word that only he could say, that when spoken, would call off the assassins. Sherlock and Moriarty then spoke to each other, and Sherlock coldly stated that, although Mycroft would just lock up Moriarty, he would most likely kill him, and that even though Sherlock seemed to be a kind person and "on the side of the Angels", Moriarty should never assume that he is one of them.
Sherlock says that he is willing to do anything to activate the fail-safe. After acknowledging that he and Sherlock are alike in the sense that Sherlock has a dark side , Moriarty realizes that as long as he is alive, Sherlock can activate the fail-safe and save his friends, so he produces a handgun from his coat pocket and shoots himself in the mouth.
Two years after Sherlock's 'death', it was concluded by police that the actor Richard Brook was in fact an alias created by Moriarty and that Sherlock was innocent of fabricating Moriarty. Moriarty appears in numerous flashbacks and imaginary sequences when contemplating how Sherlock possibly faked his death. Moriarty was also in Sherlock's mind palace, in solitary confinement and wearing a straitjacket. He taunted Sherlock but when John was mentioned, it gave Sherlock the strength he needed to recover from a serious bullet wound when he was near death.
Moriarty's face was later broadcast all over England and spoke the words "Did you miss me? On the flight back, Sherlock enters his mind palace in a drug induced state to unravel the unsolved mystery of Emelia Ricoletti , a late 19th century woman who, like Moriarty, shot herself in the head then appeared to rise from the grave.
Afterwards, Sherlock concludes that Moriarty is still dead but it becomes a matter of explaining how he's manipulating events beyond the grave, with Sherlock telling John and Mary Watson that he knows what Moriarty will do next. When Eurus Holmes traps Sherlock, John and Mycroft at Sherrinford, she plays pre-recordings that Moriarty made years prior in order to stress out Sherlock, with one of them being Moriarty going "tick-tick-tick-tick" when Sherlock is forced to work out one of her games.
A criminal genius, Jim Moriarty was a sadistic and psychopathic individual. He exhibited the following traits: extreme intelligence, grandiosity, incapacity for remorse, arrogance, and an unhealthy degree of self-confidence.
He also displayed highly Machiavellian traits. Much like Sherlock, he had a sarcastic, cynical, albeit childish sense of humour but unlike Sherlock he often spoke in a tone that would intimidate or annoy his opponents. Moriarty was arranging the deaths of others from a young age.
In , he killed schoolboy Carl Powers. He appeared to be a highly efficient criminal businessman and had a huge network of people at his command. Moriarty seemed to show, at least superficially, concern for children, as he paid Jeff Hope large amounts of money for his children every time he killed, however he actually has no care for them as shown when he had a bomb strapped to a very young boy.
Moriarty was obsessed with Sherlock Holmes and appeared to enjoy his role as a villain. Moriarty, like Sherlock, was willing to do anything to stop himself from getting bored. He was capable of frightening mood swings. He was ruthless, and committed torture and murder in sadistic ways, and when Sherlock accused him being responsible for people's deaths, Moriarty screamed at him 'That's what people do! He also rather glibly referenced people's deaths when he was personally responsible, citing that Carl Powers ' laughed at me, so I stopped him laughing '.
Moriarty was a man who would resort constantly to humour regardless of the situation, especially when mocking people for falling for his deceptions - when he faced off against Sherlock at the swimming pool, he taunted Sherlock with the fact that he managed to convince the detective he was gay.
When he played a sadistic trick on Sherlock with a derisive video during a taxi journey, he remarked ' No charge' when Sherlock discovered him. But then I suppose that was rather the point. Someone else is holding the rifle. Like you. Sherlock : Consulting criminal.
No one ever gets to me. And no one ever will. Sherlock : I did. Sherlock : Thank you. Sherlock : Yes you did. Moriarty : Yeah, okay, I did. Even thirty million quid just to get you to come out and play. So take this as a friendly warning, my dear. Back off. I have loved this. This little game of ours. Playing Jim from IT. Playing gay.
Did you like the little touch with the underwear? Sherlock : People have died. Sherlock : I will stop you. Holmes to Watson: You all right?
Moriarty : You can talk, Johnny Boy. Go ahead. Holmes offering the memory stick: Take it. Moriarty : Hm? Oh, that. The missile plans. I could have got them anywhere. Watson grabbing Moriarty: Sherlock run! Moriarty : Oh!
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